<html>
<body>
<font size=5><b>Family of slain Detroit cleric is 'hurt' by
probe<br><br>
</b></font><font size=2>By JEFF KAROUB<br>
The Associated Press<br>
Thursday, October 14, 2010; 5:13 PM <br>
<a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/14/AR2010101405124.html" eudora="autourl">
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/14/AR2010101405124.html<br>
<br>
</a></font><font size=3>DETROIT -- The son of a Detroit mosque leader
killed during a shootout with the FBI said Thursday he and his family are
disappointed and hurt by a U.S. Justice Department report clearing agents
of any wrongdoing. <br><br>
Omar Regan said the federal review into the death last October of his
father, Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah, lacked sufficient evidence to prove
his father's death was justified. He hoped the report released Wednesday
would reveal violations by FBI agents during the raid in a Dearborn
warehouse that included dozens of federal, state and local law
enforcement officers. <br><br>
"We hurt - we really hurt, and we're disappointed in the Department
of Justice," said Regan, who was joined at a news conference by
Christian, Muslim and civil-rights leaders. "It's been nearly a
year. I honestly had high hopes that they would honestly see injustice.
It's clear to everybody on the ground level that it was not
legitimate." <br><br>
Abdullah's widow, Amina Abdullah, also attended but declined to speak on
advice from her attorneys. <br><br>
Regan and others at the meeting said there's no additional audio, video,
ballistics or other evidence to support the FBI's claim that his father
shot or even possessed a gun. Abdullah was shot 20 times when agents
tried to arrest him on stolen-goods charges. <br><br>
The report concludes that "the evidence indicates that each of the
FBI agents who fired his weapon had a legitimate reason to believe that
deadly force was necessary and reasonable in order to prevent Imam
Abdullah from shooting agents with a handgun that he brandished and
fired." <br><br>
The report also concluded it was not unreasonable for other agents to
release a dog to help subdue Abdullah as he resisted. And it said that
the agents who handcuffed and searched him once he was subdued neither
injured him nor used unreasonable force. <br><br>
The assistant attorney general for civil rights,
<a href="http://www.whorunsgov.com/Profiles/Thomas_E._Perez">Thomas E.
Perez</a>, met with Abdullah's family in Detroit on Wednesday and later
with representatives of interested local groups to explain the
department's findings. <br><br>
The agents were previously cleared by Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox,
and a 300-page report from the Dearborn Police Department backed up that
decision. <br><br>
Lena Masri, attorney for the Council on American-Islamic Relations'
Michigan chapter who also is representing Abdullah's family, said the
federal report's findings are based on interviews with four agents who
fired weapons and they were conducted seven months after the shooting.
She said the report lacked statements from other agents and
nongovernmental witnesses. <br><br>
"They're asking us to accept the statements of four shooters,"
she said. <br><br>
Masri said the family is reviewing reports and documents and seeking more
information from various law enforcement agencies. It will consider
filing a wrongful death lawsuit later. <br><br>
Dawud Walid, executive director of the council's Michigan chapter, said
his group and others continue to call for the Justice Department to
review the FBI's use of informants in mosques. He said the government
failed to probe the potential misuse of informants "acting as
agent-provocateurs in this case." <br><br>
Federal authorities have described Abdullah as the leader of a radical
Sunni group that aims to create an Islamic state within the U.S.
Authorities say Abdullah preached hate for the government and encouraged
followers to commit violence, especially against police and federal
agents. According to court records, Abdullah had even warned that
"it will be straight-up war" if the government engaged with
him. <br><br>
Abdullah's family has denied that he was a radical cleric. <br><br>
"I know who my father was," Regan said. <br>
<div align="center">© 2010 The Associated Press<br><br>
<br><br>
</font><x-sigsep><p></x-sigsep>
</div>
<font size=3 color="#FF0000">Freedom Archives<br>
522 Valencia Street<br>
San Francisco, CA 94110<br><br>
</font><font size=3 color="#008000">415 863-9977<br><br>
</font><font size=3 color="#0000FF">
<a href="http://www.freedomarchives.org/" eudora="autourl">
www.Freedomarchives.org</a></font><font size=3> </font></body>
</html>